Richardson v. State

598 A.2d 180, 324 Md. 611, 1991 Md. LEXIS 199
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 12, 1991
Docket144, September Term, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 598 A.2d 180 (Richardson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. State, 598 A.2d 180, 324 Md. 611, 1991 Md. LEXIS 199 (Md. 1991).

Opinion

CHASANOW, Judge.

Appellant Art Richardson was convicted by a jury of first degree premeditated murder, felony murder, first and second degree rape, first and second degree sexual offense, burglary, robbery with a deadly weapon, and use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence. Richardson waived his right to be sentenced by a jury and elected to be sentenced by the court. The trial judge, Simpkins, J., sentenced him to death for the first degree murder, two consecutive life sentences for first degree rape and first degree sexual offense, and three consecutive twenty-year sentences for burglary, robbery with a deadly weapon, and use of a handgun in the commission of a crime of violence. The other convictions were merged. The case is before this Court on direct appeal pursuant to Maryland Code (1957, 1987 Repl.Vol.), Article 27, § 414 and Maryland Rule 8-306(c)(1).

Richardson alleges numerous trial and sentencing hearing errors, but we need consider only one contention because it requires reversal and a new trial. That error was in admitting multiple level hearsay statements made by Michael McCoy and Russell Fletcher, which were elicited by the State in the redirect examination of a police detective.

*614 The trial began with the testimony of Amy R. Because she was the victim of multiple sexual assaults, we will protect her identity by not using her surname and by referring to her husband, the homicide victim, only as Steve. Amy testified that on November 14, 1987, she and Steve lived with their infant daughter, Robin, in apartment 702 of the Cedar Towers Apartments in Baltimore County. That evening, Amy took a prescriptive medication to ease her migraine headache; the couple went to bed about 11:30. The sliding glass door to their 7th floor balcony was left open while they slept.

During the night Amy heard a sound and awoke to see a man with a gun standing at the foot of their bed. Steve jumped up and dashed down the hall, the intruder in pursuit. After hearing several gunshots, Amy ran into the kitchen where she tried to phone 911. At that point the intruder grabbed her from behind, held a knife to her throat, and dragged her back to the bedroom. There, the assailant threw Amy onto the bed, put a pillow over her face, hit her twice when she attempted to struggle, and raped her. He then left the apartment through the sliding glass door to the balcony.

A few minutes later, Amy got up and went toward the kitchen. At that time she saw a man coming back into the apartment through the sliding glass door. Amy ran into Robin’s room and tried to escape through a window, but the man caught her, dragged her back to the bedroom, blindfolded her, and tied her to the bed with strips torn from the bedsheets. Amy was raped again and forced to perform fellatio on the man, who left her bound and blindfolded on her bed.

Amy heard a sound she recognized as the balcony screen door and thought the man left, but he then “came back again.” While the man was in the bedroom, Amy heard Robin’s pacifier drop to the floor, and the baby started crying loudly. She pleaded with the man not to hurt her daughter, telling him that if he gave the pacifier back to Robin, the child would go back to sleep. The man apparent *615 ly did so, and Robin stopped crying. When the intruder returned to the bedroom, he switched on the television and watched for a while before raping Amy again. After this attack, Amy heard the man rummaging through her purse. Though still blindfolded, she sensed that it was light outside. She could hear traffic noises and told the man that her mother-in-law would be coming over for breakfast. Amy heard her assailant go into the bathroom, run the water, and return to the bedroom apparently with a wet towel; it sounded to her as if he was wiping things throughout the apartment. The man then left, this time through the front door. When Amy managed to get untied and remove her blindfold, she noticed that the clock said 10 a.m. She went to call the police and discovered Steve’s body; he had been shot four times.

Amy was obviously traumatized by the incident and, according to her testimony, tried to block it from her mind. She seemed confused and inconsistent in her initial attempts to identify the assailant or assailants. When Amy first spoke to the police, she told them that she believed there were two or three different attackers. Amy described the assailant in the murder and first rape as a black male, late twenties, slim build, muscular, short beard, mustache, wearing a leather cap and gold chain. Amy said the assailant in the second rape stood 5'10"-5'11" tall and smelled of alcohol and fruit juice. The assailant in the third rape she described as a black male with a bigger build and thicker lips.

While in the laundry room a few days before the attack, Amy was approached by two men who introduced themselves as her new next-door neighbors in apartment 704. She described the first man, whom she later identified as Richardson, as a black male, 5'9"-5'10", with collar-length hair which he wore in loose curls hanging just below his collar, and wearing several gold chains. She said the second man was a heavyset black male, 5'9"-5'10" tall. On another occasion about a week before the incident, three different men came out of apartment 704 and got on the elevator with Amy and her daughter. One of the men, who *616 was later identified as Michael McCoy, she described as 5'10", medium build, muscular with thick eyelashes, and attractive eyes; he started a conversation with her about her daughter.

On November 18, 1987—three days after the rape and murder—police showed Amy a photographic array that included Richardson’s picture in the number four position. She chose the photograph in the third position, saying that the profile looked like the man who had shot her husband. Two days later, Amy called the police back because she kept thinking about the number four photograph; she said she recognized his eyes and thought she had seen the man in that photograph on the elevator. She also said she was almost positive that the man she had seen in the laundry room, the man with the loose curls, was the one who had shot her husband but thought photograph number three was this man. In a deposition about six months later, however, Amy said she could not identify anyone she saw in the laundry room as the assailant.

Amy testified at trial that she had come to believe there was only one assailant, even though she had initially indicated that there had been two or three. She identified Richardson as the man who shot her husband and raped her three times. She also identified Richardson as the man with the loose curls whom she had previously seen in the laundry room. Amy came to believe that there was only one perpetrator because she subsequently recalled that on each occasion the assailant wore the same leather cap.

Some of the other evidence at the trial included Amy’s testimony that Steve had a drug problem and had purchased and used cocaine in apartment 704. He had given his guitar to someone in that apartment as payment for drugs. Shortly before the murder, however, Steve became actively involved in a drug rehabilitation program and had stopped using illegal drugs.

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Bluebook (online)
598 A.2d 180, 324 Md. 611, 1991 Md. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-state-md-1991.